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We present the velocity dispersion measurements of four massive $sim10^{11}M_odot$ quiescent galaxies at $3.2 < z < 3.7$ based on deep H and K$-$band spectra using the Keck/MOSFIRE near-infrared spectrograph. We find high velocity dispersions of order $sigma_esim250$ km/s based on strong Balmer absorption lines and combine these with size measurements based on HST/WFC3 F160W imaging to infer dynamical masses. The velocity dispersion are broadly consistent with the high stellar masses and small sizes. Together with evidence for quiescent stellar populations, the spectra confirm the existence of a population of massive galaxies that formed rapidly and quenched in the early universe $z>4$. Investigating the evolution at constant velocity dispersion between $zsim3.5$ and $zsim2$, we find a large increase in effective radius $0.35pm0.12$ dex and in dynamical-to-stellar mass ratio $<$log(M$_{textrm{dyn}}$/M*)$>$ of 0.33$pm0.08$ dex, with low expected contribution from dark matter. The dynamical masses for our $zsim3.5$ sample are consistent with the stellar masses for a Chabrier initial mass function (IMF), with the ratio $<$log(M$_{textrm{dyn}}$/M$^*_{textrm{Ch}})>$ = -0.13$pm$0.10 dex suggesting an IMF lighter than Salpeter may be common for massive quiescent galaxies at $z>3$. This is surprising in light of the Salpeter or heavier IMFs found for high velocity dispersion galaxies at $zsim2$ and cores of present-day ellipticals, which these galaxies are thought to evolve into. Future imaging and spectroscopic observations with resolved kinematics using the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope could rule out potential systematics from rotation, and confirm these results.
We present Keck-I MOSFIRE near-infrared spectroscopy for a sample of 13 compact star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at redshift $2leq z leq2.5$ with star formation rates of SFR$sim$100M$_{odot}$ y$^{-1}$ and masses of log(M/M$_{odot}$)$sim10.8$. Their high
We use MMT spectroscopy and deep Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) imaging to compare the spectroscopic central stellar velocity dispersion of quiescent galaxies with the effective dispersion of the dark matter halo derived from the stacked lensing sign
We study the rest-frame ultra-violet sizes of massive (~0.8 x 10^11 M_Sun) galaxies at 3.4<z<4.2, selected from the FourStar Galaxy Evolution Survey (ZFOURGE), by fitting single Sersic profiles to HST/WFC3/F160W images from the Cosmic Assembly Near-I
We present Keck LRIS spectroscopy for a sample of 103 massive galaxies with redshifts 0.9 < z < 1.6. Of these, 56 are quiescent with high signal-to-noise absorption line spectra, enabling us to determine robust stellar velocity dispersions for the la
We report the likely identification of a substantial population of massive M~10^11M_Sun galaxies at z~4 with suppressed star formation rates (SFRs), selected on rest-frame optical to near-IR colors from the FourStar Galaxy Evolution Survey. The obser